Which Publishers Are Winning On Facebook? HuffPo & BuzzFeed Take The Lead

These news brands won on Facebook in December 2015, seeing success in covering topics such as gun control, politics and the environment.

A Newswhip report analyzed the top English-speaking Facebook publishers in December, finding a notable change in results from our last report. It seems that most older sites with established followings won the engagement race this time around. This kept Huffington Post and BuzzFeed in the lead, with a Facebook engagement total (encompassing Likes, shares and comments) of 32.4 million and 26.4 million respectively.

Interestingly enough, traditional media sites seemed to build traction. The New York Times, defined as a “hard news site,” came in fifth place among shares in December, and the Washington Post has also debuted in the top 10 for most shares.

What Are The Most Popular Topics?

December saw a large variety of activity surrounding the topics of gun control, climate change and the refugee crisis. A New York Times highlight on increased gun control, for example, drew nearly 370,000 interactions. Similarly, political topics brought heated discussions, with a piece entitled “All Politicians Lie. Some Lie More than Others” driving 106,000 comments on Facebook alone.

Other stories that typically drive attention relate to breaking news, especially on sites like the BBC. Its top-performing stories announced the death of Motorhead guitarist Lemmy, a Scotland bridge closure due to weather, and an unveiling of an “anti-pee wall” in London.

But their largest story was a quiz called “How Dark is Your Personality?” that had more than 250,000 engagements. Yes, most people do like to talk about themselves, and this post by the BCC gave readers an opportunity to do so.

Video is building traction, too: The Daily Mail has been experimenting heavily with the medium and found that it has had a sizable reach.

What About Instant Articles?

Are Instant Articles making an impact on the numbers we’re seeing? It’s still too early to tell, but the article speculates that Instant Articles are seeing “higher-than-average” levels of engagement. In time, we should be coming out with reporting that should indicate whether Instant Articles are winners (our guess) or losers.